Word: hatfields
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...Mark Hatfield, 59, Republican Senator from Oregon, predicting the course of interest rates for the rest of the year: "We'll see them down three to four points. But I should add that I predicted Thomas Dewey's election...
There are estimated to be anywhere from 10,000 to 20,000 earth stations in operation. "There will probably be 10,000 more of these things sold next year," enthuses Dave Bondon, president of a Hightstown, N.J., electronics subsidiary that makes earth station antennas. Says Andy Hatfield, whose AVCOM company makes components for the station: "It's phenomenal. You see these pictures that came from Saturn and it's like being part of NASA. Watch an earth station and you'll never look at terrestrial television again...
...Hatfield and McCoy feud between N.Y. and L.A. is fueled at Broadway's Biltmore Theater by Furth's comic sniper fire. In Director Gene Saks' nimble hands, the characters suffer the gauntlet of Pacific perils from mudslides to brushfires to shudderingly mirthful earthquakes. Furth's people are antic and simpatico. Mae (Betty Garrett) has been an offstage mother to her orchestra conductor son since he first brandished a baton. That he is 40 and a bachelor mortifies her, but not as much as having blurted out on a TV interview that he was not a homosexual...
...open to dispute. Unless the U.S. proposes to match the Soviets tank for tank, it must rely on high-technology weapons to "fight outnumbered and win," as the Army's official field manual puts it. Still, the reformers have caught the ear of an influential group of legislators: Cohen, Hatfield and Alaska's Ted Stevens among the Senate's controlling Republicans; Hart, Nunn and Michigan's Carl Levin among Democratic Senators; Republicans Jack Edwards of Alabama, Newton Gingrich of Georgia and New York Democrat Joseph Addabbo in the House. By immersing themselves in the technical arcana of defense arguments, they...
...vote "contrary to the best interests of my country, inexplicable to my professional colleagues . . . and damaging to the health and growth of the world's children." Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts convened an unofficial hearing on the U.S. dissent, which he denounced as "shameful." Republican Senator Mark Hatfield of Oregon warned that the vote could send "a message of indifference to the sanctity of human life." Outside the U.S., the reaction was more puzzlement than anger, though even London's conservative Financial Times declared, "It is special pleading of the worst kind to invoke the right...